About Me

Welcome! I am passionate about excellence in early childhood education. I do a mainly Reggio inspired child-led/ teacher-facilitated/ play-based intensive preschool curriculum. Aspects of Montessori and other programs are sprinkled throughout as well. My graduates are all at the top of their classes and many are in gifted programs. I homeschooled my two boys for l3 years for academic reasons.
I have a master's degree in Human Resources (training and development,) and college courses in Early Childhood Education and Development, along with my 120 hour Child Development Associate training.
One of my clients has a doctorate in Early Childhood Education and Special Education, so I always have her expertise to tap into as well.
I welcome questions and comments.

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Thursday, June 20, 2013

Prior learning: For awhile now, we've been discussing addition and subtraction and doing simple equations through play and finger exercises. We have worked on breaking sets into groups through classification and sorting since infancy. They are also familiar with the signs involved in addition and subtraction.Today we did a formal introduction to addition and subtraction and the related equations. I asked the children to pick a number between 2 and 9. They chose 3. I asked them to get a SET of three items from the play area.

I then asked them to DIVIDE their items into two GROUPS. Ironically, they each chose items that easily split into groups of one and two, which I hadn't though about beforehand.

"When we ADD, we put two groups together. How many do you have in each GROUP?"2 and 1"Now...Grab your GROUPS..."

"And bang them together! Now they are ONE SET again. A SET of 3 made up of GROUPS of 2 and 1."

They mimicked my actions: Holding up my 1 white block, "ONE," holding up my set of 2 green blocks, "PLUS TWO...EQUALS...," bringing them together in front of me, "THREE!"Separate the groups in front of me.Holding up my 2 green blocks, "TWO," holding up my 1 white block, "PLUS ONE...EQUALS...," bringing them together in front of me, "THREE!""Let's write our fact family for the ADDITION of 1, 2, 3 on the white board:"

1 + 2 = 3

2 + 1 = 3

"One plus two and two plus one are the SAME and together, one and two are ALWAYS three.""ADDING is when we put groups together. SUBTRACTING is when we take groups apart. How many do we have all together? Yes...THREE. Pick up your set of ONE."

"Now let's take away, MINUS, our set of two. How many is left?...YES! One. Three MINUS two EQUALS one.""Let's write our fact family for SUBTRACTION of 1, 2, 3 on the white board."

3 - 1 = 2

3 - 2 = 1

"This is called a fact family. It is the four equations, two addition
and two subtraction, that can be made from a family of numbers."

"Now, when I say MINUS, I want you to split your groups APART."

"When I say ADD, I want you to put your groups TOGETHER."

We did this a few times.Mimicking my movements: "Now, stand up WITHOUT your items and make fists. When I say SUBTRACT, open your arms REAL WIDE, because when we SUBTRACT, we pull sets APART...SUBTRACT!!" "Good. Now, when I say ADD, bring your fists together, because when we ADD, we bring sets TOGETHER...ADD!!"I would randomly call these out during the rest of the day and the children would open and close their arms appropriately. Tags: math, addition, subtraction, preschool, introduction, concepts, mathematics, equations, fact families, counting, early, concept, child, care, daycare, pre-k, kindergarten

Someone asked what craft activities could be done with baby food jars. This is a great one for the summer, a beach theme, ocean theme or rainbow theme.

Here's a sneak peak inside my baby food jar bin. We are STOCKED! This heavy bin is holding a gate up on one side, so I couldn't get it any wider. I have a few hundred in there, generously donated by my friend Kimber.

Sand is not friendly to my vacuum or plumbing, so we try to do that OUTSIDE. Plus, the pretty, very fine, CLEAN and sanitized white sand that holds color well that I would like for these types of projects, is VERY expensive at the pet store/aquarium shop. So instead, we use rice or salt.

I had a variety of rice and salt already colored, so I decided to use up what we all ready had available.

The salt is very uniform in size. To make it look more like sand, you can add Kosher or other larger grain salt to the finer stuff for a greater variety to the texture.The rice I place into my coffee/spice grinder...

Give it a whirl with a few shakes...and it comes out multi-textured and multi-shaded in color.

I set out the colored rice and salt in small containers.

They were given the sticker box to decorate their baby food jars on the outside.

Then they filled their jars using baby formula scoops, which are the perfect size. For this and a lot of things.

They LOVED this activity and were VERY proud of the results.Since they are glass, I asked the parents to be observant of how they were handled by the children. I also did not have time to seal the lids on with hot glue or super glue, so that was left to the parents as well.I went to Miss B's 5 yo birthday party last weekend and mom had them sitting in the kitchen window, a pretty rainbow against the sky.

Since this was a spur of the moment craft, to have pics to show someone, I went back and spray painted the lids with a spray paint for metal. The red I had was clogged, so they got black and hammered silver. Normal paint will not stick to these slick lids, it needs to be for metal.

I used 1 packet each of lemonade and grape Koolaid to get the lavender color. The Koolaid doesn't add as much scent as it does color.

I then used my spice grinder to grind up 2 tablespoons of dried lavender flowers and added those to scent it as lavender. I don't like using lavender essential oil, as it can be a major skin irritant.* The flowers add the same scent without the intensity of the concentrated oils and potential allergic reactions.

I also provided dried lavender flowers for the children to add in to the play dough or play with as they chose.

I was surprised that they played with this play dough for the longest time as is, without getting a lot of toys out of our play dough bin. They just LOVED the smell of it and the sensory of the dough and dried lavender flowers.

Kandinksy is a wonderful artist to introduce to the preschool set. His use of bright colors, wonderful color combinations and shapes is both visually and perceptually delightful.On our art room wall, we haveColor Study of Squares - Kandinskyand Rhythm Joie de Vivre - Delaunay.We discussed Kandinsky as a person and artist and compared his work to that of Delaunay. This art lesson went over well with the almost 5 year old. The 3s just saw balloons and were impatient to get started.They first chose their paper. White, color, big, little...Next we did color mixing. I laid out the plastic lids we used as paint pallets, and added the red, yellow and blue to each one. Then the children placed the appropriate color of balloon on the primary pallets. We discussed the other balloons and why there were two colors on those. I gave each a balloon and they used the balloon to mix the paint to form that color.

We do paint mixing frequently, so they were pretty on it as to what primary color combinations made which secondary color. Once the colors were all mixed, they were lined up for painting. We reviewed them in English, for the 1-2s, who were doing brush painting at the time, and in Spanish.

The almost 5 year old, got the idea, and did a wonderful job of painting a representation of Kandinsky, though she knew she didn't HAVE to do so.

The 3s and 4 year old LOVED the process and did some interesting work by dragging the balloons, pouncing them around, and smooshing them.

I was surprised at how well this art activity went over. I would definitely give it a 5 star rating for preschoolers. One of our favorite books on color mixing, that I highly recommend:

Our favorite video for color mixing is OK Go's Sesame Street video:This craft would also be good for children with sensory issues that do not like to get paint on themselves. The knot makes it easy for the children to hold it at the top and still be able to utilize it as a painting tool, but even if they have two hands on and are smooshing it down, they get very little paint on themselves unless they are trying to do so or are over zealous.The task of getting the balloon to do what they wanted was an interesting study. It wasn't as easy as they thought it would be and took some experimentation and manipulation. I had purposefully tried to make the balloons not be EXACTLY the same size so that they would have the sensory experience of manipulating each one in a slightly different manner.SKILLS: